79 Mo. 433 | Mo. | 1883
Plaintiff commenced this action in the circuit court of Buchanan county against defendants Campbell and Sanders and Thos. E. Tootle, to recover damages for an alleged libel, charged to have been published by them.
The petition alleged that plaintiff was a member of tiie Eirst Presbyterian Church of St. Joseph, Missouri, and that defendants falsely, maliciously, etc., published of and concerning him, the libelous matter, consisting of a preamble, in which it was stated that plaintiff had made false and' malicious statements concerning the pastor of that church, Campbell, and a resolution suspending plaintiff from the communion of the church. In a second count, omitting the formal parts, it was alleged that defendants published of and concerning plaintiff a certain other libel, consisting of the following: “You, meaning plaintiff", were by unan
Defendants filed separate answers, to the effect that defendant Campbell was pastor of said church, and that he and his co-defendants and other parties named, were pastor and ruling elders of said congregation, and composed a judicatory known as the church session, which, by the laws of the church, has jurisdiction to admonish, rebuke and excommunicate members of said church, found by them to be deserving of censure; that to this session defendant Campbell reported that plaintiff' had made false and defamatory statements in regard to Campbell; that the session, at a regular meeting, in the performance of its duty in the regular administration of church discipline and according to the usages and practices of the church, without any malice toward plaintiffj and believing it within the scope of official duty, having found plaintiff deserving of censure, adopted said preamble and resolutions, which were entered upon its record book. It is also alleged that there was another judicatory of said church, known as the presbytery, to which plaintiff'had a right to appeal from the decision of the session, but that, although notified of his suspension, he failed to prosecute an appeal. The same is in substance the answer to the second count, and the several answers of the other defendants do not differ materially from that of Campbell in the points which we shall consider.
It appears from the evidence that plaintiff had no notice that charges would be or had been made against him to the session, nor was he present at the investigation. The evidence was conflicting on the question of veracity between plaintiff' and the pastor, and we refrain from expressing an opinion as to the weight of evidence.
What plaintiff' relied upon as a publication of the alleged libel mentioned in the first count, was a reading of the same from a copy by the pastor to the congregation, the entering the same on the session minutes and exhibiting them to the members of the session, by its clerk, to get
There was a mass of evidence read to the jury, consisting of extracts from the constitution of the church and digests of its laws, and adjudications thereon, in relation to the judicatories of the church, which the court left it to the jury to expound for themselves. If the civil courts take it upon themselves to administer the law of a church their duty is to inform the jury what it is, and not to leave them to grope through the judicial literature of the church to ascertain it.
The main objection to the action of the session is its proceeding to investigate the charges against plaintiff, in his absence, without notice to him; and the court, in the instructions to the jury, adopted the view that this irregularity rendered the action of the session void, and that,, therefore, it afforded defendants no defense to this suit and obviated the necessity of proving express malice against defendants. The court, among others, gave the following instructions at plaintiff’s instance:
5. If the jury believe from the evidence that the session of the Eirst Presbyterian Church convened on the 31st day of October, 1877, had no right, under the constitution of the Presbyterian Church in the United States, to suspend Israel Landis, the plaintiff, from the communion of said church, and adopt a preamble alleging that he had been guilty of malicious falsehood, without giving said Landis any notice that they intended to proceed against him as a member of the Eirst Presbyterian Church in St. Joseph, for any violation of the constitution or discipline of the Pres
10. If the jury believe from the evidence that the paper writing set forth in the second count of the plaintiff’s petition was the result of a concerted writing and agreement of and between the members of the session in proof, including the defendants, and that it was a part of said agreement that it should be read or announced publicly in the church, and that the same was so announced, and that the said paper writing was by the defendants, or either of them, with the consent or direction of the other, shown or read to any one, then such acts were sufficient publication of said paper writing by defendants.
It is contended by respondent’s counsel that section 10, article 11 of the constitution of Missouri, requiring the
~We have not deemed it necessary to notice particularly the instructions refused or given. We think that the court, on a new trial of this cause, can determine, by what is contained in this opinion, which should have been given and which refused. There is a mass of testimony in relation to the jurisdiction of the several judicatories of the Presbyterian Church, and their modes of procedure, which we do not deem it necessary to notice, except to say that it was clearly showm that the session had jurisdiction to try the plaintiff on the charges preferred, and that he had an appeal to a higher tribunal in the church from its decision against him.
the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
A motion for rehearing ivas overruled.